Комментарии:
I like it! 🏆
ОтветитьNice idea but any reason for not drilling a hole for the dowels? Also if the piece on the back is only glued on why not make it out of one piece of wood?
ОтветитьMatur suwun bos ilmunya
ОтветитьI wish I had seen this before sniping 3 inch wide bites out of my wide boards!
ОтветитьJust got a new hand planer for Xmas! This is a very interesting idea! Thanks for sharing! Gonna subscribe to support your channel!
ОтветитьI was thinking about similar idea :) I don't know why this is not commercial solution seams way better than small jointer
Ответитьwow, 1.5 thousand grown children are mad enough to dislike bc they are unable to comprehend what happening. hahaha
ОтветитьGood lord, if you have money to buy all those fancy machines why dont you just buy a thickness planer?
You need to be a space scientist to build that fancy contraption.!
It is impossible to do all that if you havent got all the fancy infrastructure available.
Cast iron flat top.
Fancy saw.
Lots of expensive wood.
Etc etc.🙈
Awasome love from India 😊
Ответитьgreat! this way we can ensure a perfectly flat surface!
Ответитьim surprised you havnt cut your fingers off
ОтветитьThis can come very handy to me that I’m just starting woodworking as a side hobby and I already own an electric hand planner, matter of fact I own this exact model, Makita I believe? Thank you, love your channel
ОтветитьOwn a 12" planer... 🤤
ОтветитьYou need to stop reaching behind the blade with your fingers. Very dangerous.
ОтветитьBeautiful work. Thank you for the inspiration. Time to get to work on my own design for my needs. Cheers.
ОтветитьGoste muito que projeto éselete parabéns meu amigo
ОтветитьMantap pisan euy
ОтветитьA very clever DIY jig.
Ответить뭘 만들었는지 이해가 안 되네;;;
ОтветитьAre you selling plans for this nice idea?
ОтветитьI attempted to plane a 2x4 that was not straight. When I finished three passes, I put a level on the board, and there are still high and low spots. Why?
ОтветитьI came across this looking for something else but this is exactly what I need for a big project I'm planning for this winter. Thanks!
ОтветитьThis video make me go purchase a thickness planer.....
ОтветитьWayyyyy too much work
Ответитьomg do not operate table saw like that. Please be more careful
ОтветитьBrilliant! Great design.
ОтветитьAwesome technique, superbly done ✔️
ОтветитьRs.
ОтветитьNice, but how do you adjust the height/board thickness? By changing the support beneath the work piece?
ОтветитьDoes dragging the planer backwards over the board while running dull the knives?
ОтветитьNever seen it done with a planer. Made a few router sleds for surfacing in the past. Nice work
ОтветитьEXCELENTE
ОтветитьBrilliant. However I’m not, so I will just use my surface planer by DeWalt:-)
ОтветитьClever!
ОтветитьN🍦
ОтветитьNice idea!! But buddy your forearm arm almost hit that blade 3 or 4 times reaching over it. Becareful
ОтветитьReaching over a spinning blade like that is just an accident waiting to happen! Really bad practice.
ОтветитьWhy would this be preferable to something a little more easy to make for a beginner like a router sled?
ОтветитьBrilliant idea to turn this simple hand planer into a jointing and thicknessing planer!
ОтветитьA planer will need more passes over the surface than a router but is probably quicker overall. It can also give a better finish than a router. The good ones have excellent chip collection so a planer should be less messy as well.
However, I don't like the dowels on the front end. Appropriate diameter steel rod going right through would be a stronger solution. The model shown even has a clamping screw for just such a rod.
No one in their right mind would build that thing.
ОтветитьThe riving knife seems to be out of alignment
ОтветитьLove it. It's like a router jig but with a hand planer instead. Nice.
ОтветитьI've been looking for a jig such as this to flatten slabs with my hand planer that are too wide for my 735. Thank you!
ОтветитьOr use a router sled
ОтветитьHow do you adjust for different thickness boards?
Ответить